Skip to main content

Google joins Ford in Detroit mobility hub

Latest development in industrial city's Corktown district will be a 'transport innovation zone'
By Adam Hill February 10, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Plans include a real-world future mobility testing site within the district, the ‘transportation innovation zone’

Google has joined Ford Motor Co to partner in turning a famous old part of Detroit into a mobility innovation hub.

The Michigan Central Innovation District is in the Corktown neighbourhood of the US industrial city and is based around the iconic - but long abandoned - Michigan Central Train Station building, which Ford had pledged to restore by the end of 2022.

Google says it will offer digital skills training, mentoring to high school students learning to code, and Google Cloud technology for Michigan Central projects and research on the future of mobility.

Ford has invested in the area since 2018, announcing plans in 2020 to turn it into a 'walkable mobility' district and making it a part of Detroit's planned connected and autonomous vehicle corridor running from the city to Ann Arbor.

Under a Memorandum of Understanding between Ford, the state of Michigan and the city of Detroit, the state plans to allocate $126 million in new and existing investments, programming, and resources to support the goals of the district.

Michigan Department of Transportation will be among the agencies collaborating on the project, which will see the City of Detroit providing resources for a new real-world testing site within the district, called the ‘transportation innovation zone’.

"This site will make it possible for mobility-focused companies to fast-track the safe piloting and deployment of new transportation solutions," a statement says.

“Only a few short years ago, I announced Ford’s investment in Detroit because I believed in a vision that reimagined the iconic Michigan Central train station and surrounding area as a place of possibility again,” said Bill Ford, Ford executive chair.

"The arrival of Google as a founding partner is exactly the kind of investment and progress I knew was possible to revitalise our hometown."

City mayor Mike Duggan added: "For more than a century, Detroit has been the leader in automotive innovation and today marks a major step forward in keeping Detroit at the forefront of mobility innovation for the next century.”

Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer said the development would "shape the next century of transportation solutions while reducing emissions and accelerating electrification".

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • London to benefit from major roads programme
    March 4, 2014
    Dozens of locations across the UK capital are set to be transformed in a US$6.7 billion programme as part of the largest investment in the capital’s road and street network in a generation. In response to the recommendations of the Mayor’s Roads Task Force, a total of 50 projects are now underway. Alongside the transformation of 33 of London’s biggest and nastiest road junctions announced last week as part of the Mayor’s cycling programme, there will also be more than US$334 million of additional far-re
  • Oregon tests new mileage-base charging scheme
    August 5, 2013
    Jack Opiola from D’Artagnan Consulting LLP explains Oregon’s latest moves which mandated a trial of mileage-based road use charging. In 1919, Oregon made the 20th century’s most significant contribution to transportation funding policy, becoming the first state in America to implement a gas tax to pay for roads. This summer Oregon’s Legislature passed, and Governor John Kitzhaber signed into law, Senate Bill 810 which requires a distance-based road usage charge for 5,000 volunteer vehicles by 1 July 2015. T
  • Columbia goes intermodal to support sustainability
    April 10, 2014
    David Crawford on the ups and downs of a Latin metropolis. Medellín, Colombia’s second city and a recognised leader in sustainable transport thinking, is rapidly extending its substantial existing investment in modern mobility. It is deploying both an enhanced integrated traffic management array and the country’s first intermodal public transportation management system. The supplier of both, under separate €9 million (US$12.3 million) contracts, is Spanish engineering company Indra, a major exporter
  • Detroit bridge to 'enhance community connectivity and mobility'
    February 23, 2024
    Gordie Howe International Bridge will link trail systems between Canada and the US